I can't fall asleep so I'm perusing the forums. I met Mr. Clements in 2005. I also back then signed up for ARMA. At the time, I knew little about the SCA or other groups. I just happened to bump into him, literally at a ren-faire, we started talking so I thought to join.
After taking advantage of ARMA's extensive resources and library I left that group in 2007. I basically got tired of the "our way is the only way" kind of attitude. Also, of note, I wasn't anywhere where I could practice with them unfortunately, I was on my own. In 2010, I learned the past of Mr. Clements and his relationship with the SCA, or as far as their perspective of it.
Personally, I think there is a lot out there that is wrong, and it's true. But, there's also a lot out there, both recent developments and much older stuff, that isn't wrong and is in fact quite good. We're all trying to interpret something that may have one picture, or two, snapshots if you will, of a full movement. Try and imagine if there were individual frames, like for animation, of those movements instead? It would be amazing, and far easier for everyone to see something more similar. But as far as I'm concerned, there are schools today, as there were hundreds of years ago. And I must say, one of the things I enjoy, is that today it seems, no one for the most part, except Mr. Clements, says their way is the only way! When I checked out the SCA for four months, three days a week training for minimum four hours a day, I really enjoyed how I could show them my stuff, and although they were quite persuasive about how they did it, allowed me to at least show mine.
Beyond that, I too have a problem with a lack of respect towards the weapon. That has been a pet peeve of mine since I was little, and needless to say in this group, I don't think I need to extrapolate on the gory details of what scarred me. It saddens and scares me that people can get lax. It doesn't matter if it's a police officer with their sidearm, a Marine and his rifle, or a SCAdian with a "stick." All can kill and maim and we need to respect them as such. Usually if I see that kind of disrespect towards that particular weapon, I don't practice with them anymore, be it at a range, the desert, or on a tournament field.
It saddens me that Mr. Clements has gotten this elitist sort of viewpoint because I know he's a treasure-trove of knowledge. The fact remains though, we weren't there to witness it. We don't have recordings (and how often to people call "foul" in a baseball game or football game with video devices!?) all we have is our passions and their artifacts. Everything else has come from that, and we all can do so much more if we work together.